The New York Federal Reserve released its quarterly assessment of household debt this week and found that delinquencies eased across most types of consumer debt except for (shocker) student loans. This is a good sign for the health of the household. Interestingly the number of credit inquiries within the past six months is at multi-year lows, which is an indicator of weak consumer credit demand – that doesn’t jive all that much with the record levels of consumer confidence. Here sentiment isn’t aligning with behavior.This week the NFIB (National Federation of Independent Businesses) released its Small Business Optimism index which in July rose 0.7 points to 107.9 points and is just 0.1 point away from the all-time record high of 108 reached in July 1983. Keep in mind that 60% of NFIB members are businesses with 1-5 employees, so this report is closer to consumer sentiment than other business sentiment studies. The tightness in the percent of companies with job openings they cannot fill reached yet another record high. In July, small business owners added the largest number of workers per firm, net 0.37, since 2006. Those reporting higher compensation costs also remains near the highs since the end of the recession with the Quality of Labor continuing to be the single most important problem facing the business. Overall the report was pretty rosy and that’s what made all the headlines, but (and you knew there would be a but as our job at Tematica is to always go deeper and find the risks) the Outlook for General Business Conditions which evaluates sentiment 6 months out, remains well below the November 2017 high of 48 at 35. That is still well above where it has been for much of this expansionary period, but we look for directional trends so that bears noting. The percent planning for higher prices three months out is at the highest level since the start of the recovery. Those reporting actual higher prices today versus three months prior remains near the highest level since the recovery began. Capital Expenditure plans continue to trend higher, but for context, remains below pre-recession levels.Looking outside the US, the Eurozone economy was slightly stronger in the second quarter than initially estimated, with year-over-year GDP growth reaching 2.2% versus the prior 2.1% estimate. This improvement was driven primarily by better-than-expected growth in Germany. So that’s on the plus side, but in the rearview mirror while Eurostat reported this week that the bloc’s industrial output declined by -0.7% in June, significantly worse than the expected -0.4% decline. The loss was driven primarily by a -2.9% decline in the output of capital goods, such as machinery, which indicates that companies may be expected weaker growth in the coming quarters. Consumer and intermediate good output also declined.Italy took over the headlines as a major bridge in my adopted hometown of Genoa collapsed. The ensuing finger-pointing, denials and accusations are not exactly improving investor confidence in a nation that is already struggling with a weak banking sector and a slow-to-no-growth economy. You can read more on the details here .